Kings of Hockeywood

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Las Vegas is coming to the NHL. The announcement is a mere formality at this point. So for established teams like the Kings, the question now is which players to protect from the expansion Black Knights in the expansion draft that will follow next season.

According to Chris Johnston of Sportsnet, every team will have to expose at least 2 forwards and 1 defenseman who played 40 games the previous season or 70 over the previous two. In terms of who may be protected, teams have two options; they can either protect 7 forwards, 3 defensemen, and a goalie or 8 skaters and 1 goalie. Teams must protect any player who has a no-movement clause extending beyond July 1, 2017. And no player with 2 or fewer years as a professional can be selected by Vegas so they needn't be protected (so prospects like Kempe are safe).

So with that in mind, who on the current roster should the Kings protect in next year's expansion draft? Check out my thoughts after the jump!

Saturday, April 23, 2016

Fresh off missing out on the postseason in 2015 one year after winning the Cup for the second time in three seasons and for the first time since 2009, the Kings entered the playoffs with home-ice advantage in the first round for the first time since 1991-92. Superficially, it looked like the Kings were primed to do some damage and maybe even claim Lord Stanley's chalice for the third time in the last five years.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

I'm still trying to figure out how to get this onto iTunes and other podcatchers, but you can enjoy the inaugural Kings of Hockeywood podcast here, in which my co-host Chris and I discuss which players from the Kings' Cup-winning rosters have a shot at the Hall of Fame.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Can all of us who are not hardcore baseball fans acknowledge that MLB's current alignment is pretty stupid? Why do they adhere to the two "league" system? They're not even remotely separate; there is always an interleague series ongoing thanks to the balanced 15-teams-in-each-league structure. Why the heck is a team like Seattle playing in a geographically-aligned division with teams in Texas when, unlike hockey, baseball actually has enough teams in the Pacific time zone to have an entire division out there?

Wouldn't the following completely geographical alignment be much better?

Designated Hitter
Abandon the stupidity of different rules for different stadiums. Everyone has a DH.

Unbalanced Divisions
In order to get up to 8 teams in all 4 divisions, I would move the Nationals into the Northeast and expand into any two of San Antonio, Oklahoma City, Puerto Rico, and Nashville.

Schedule
Every team plays at least one series in every stadium over the course of the season. Probably about 10-12 games against division opponents and 4-5 against everyone else.

Playoffs
Top 2 teams in each division make it, followed by the next 4 best teams overall. The best team overall faces the 16th seed, 2nd against 15th, etc... The teams with the better records get home field advantage in every series.

All-Star Game
By abandoning the "Two-League" format, you lose the AL-NL battle. How about the World Series champs against an all-star team made up from the other teams? Or just do like hockey and have two captains pick sides? It's an all-star game, and while it's necessary because of sponsors and kids like it, it's inherently stupid, so acknowledge that fact and eliminate the "importance" of an exhibition game.

Voila, I have fixed baseball. MLB can go ahead and get in touch with me via Twitter to find out where to send the check.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

2006
74th pick: goalie Jeff Zatkoff
I guess Lombardi didn't trust his selection of Jonathan Bernier 11th overall this season? Zatkoff played a season in Ontario and 3 in Manchester but never got into a game with the Kings

86th pick: center/right wing Bud Holloway

Spent a season split between Ontario and Manchester and then two full seasons in Manchester. Scored 108 points in 153 games in those two seasons, but never got a call-up to the Kings. He split for Sweden with Oscar Moller and the two played together with Skelleftea AIK from 2011-12 to 2013-14. He played in Bern in the Swiss league last year.

2007
82nd pick: center/right wing Bryan CameronNever made it into the Kings system, currently toiling in the ECHL with Alaska.

2008
63rd pick: center Robert Czarnik

Spent 3 years in Manchester, but the Kings traded him to Montreal last season.

74th pick: defenseman Andrew Campbell
Spent 2008-2009 through 2012-13 with the Monarchs and finally got his chance with the Kings last season when he got into 3 games in the NHL. He is in the Coyotes' system now and played 33 games with the Desert Dogs this past season (and 40 with their AHL squad).

88th pick: left wing Geordie Wudrick
Never made it into the Kings system. Split this past season between the ECHL and the SPHL.

200984th pick: defenseman Nicolaus Deslauriers
A highly touted prospect who the Kings decided was not particularly good at defense and moved to the left wing because of the dearth of LW prospects in the system. The Kings traded him and Hudson Fasching to Buffalo for Brayden McNabb in March 2014. He played every game this past season with the Sabres, scoring 5 goals and 10 assists.

201070th pick: center Jordan Weal
With 69 points in 73 games this season and 22 in 19 playoff games en route to the Calder Cup championship and playoff MVP honors, Jordan Weal has made a strong case for getting a serious shot at the Kings roster next season. I don't know if he can come up and make an impact anywhere near what Toffoli and Pearson have done in the last two years, but he is going to get a chance to be a top 6 winger in Los Angeles in 2015-16.

2011
80th pick: center Andy Andreoff
Andreoff finally got his chance with the Kings this past season after two full seasons in Manchester. He didn't really impress with only 3 points in 18 games, spending most of the season in the press box, but he will probably be retained as a 4th line center going forward.

82nd pick: center Nick Shore
Shore will get a shot at Stoll's job next season, despite a rookie campaign almost as unimpressive as Andreoff's, 1 goal and 6 assist in 34 games, replacing Mike Richards. He did have 18 points in 19 playoff games with Manchester, helping them to their Calder Cup championship, but during that run he was obviously outshone by Jordan Weal.

2012- none2013- none

2014
90th pick: center Michael Amadio
Sent back to North Bay of the OHL, Amadio jumped from 38 points in 64 games his draft year to 71 in 68 this past season. I'm sure he'll get another year in junior before moving on to Manchester in 2016, but this kid looks like he may be one to look out for in a few years.

In total, Lombardi has taken 11 players in the 3rd round. Only 3 have ever skated with the Kings, 1 of whom played only 3 games, and none has even played the equivalent of a half season in an L.A. uniform yet or contributed to either of the Stanley Cup championships. Deslauriers proved a valuable asset in acquiring McNabb. Weal still looks like he is going to be a valuable member of the Kings and Amadio may well prove to be as well.

A few months ago I wrote up a retrospective look at Dean Lombardi's track record in First Round draft picks, which you can view here, if you're so inclined (I recommend it, it's a pretty good read, if I do say so myself). With the 2015 draft approaching and the Kings holding their highest pick in five years (with all the success this team had between 2012 and 2014, it really does feel like it should have been longer than that since they were a lottery team), it felt like a good time to pick up again and review the team’s 2nd round selections during his tenure.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

The buzzer just sounded, ending not only the Kings' final road game of the season, but also their chance to be the first repeat Stanley Cup winner since 1998. The 3-1 loss to the Flames was their 3rd in a row on this season-ending Western Canadian road swing. The Kings pretty much needed to win every game on the trip but instead they lost them all, and in the process became the 3rd team since Expansion to win the Cup one year and miss the playoffs the next, joining the 1970 Montreal Canadiens, 1996 New Jersey Devils, and 2007 Carolina Hurricanes in a pretty infamous club. (Although, it should be noted, the Habs and Devils went on to win the Cup again within the next five years!)

So what happens now to a team that despite having been outside the playoff bubble most of the season was all along considered a Stanley Cup favorite by many?